View allAll Photos Tagged forestpath

Camera: Zeiss Ikon Ikonta C (521/2) 6x9 cm

Lens: Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar f/4.5 10.5 cm, uncoated

Film: Ilford FP4 Plus 125

Exposure: 1/15 sec and f/11, tripod

Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab

Edited under Adobe Lightroom

 

Focusing at the trees on the left at f/11 results in sharpness in the focal plane and a moderately blurred background.

 

This hiking trail near Holzerath follows the route of a Roman road.

The gravel marks a frequently traversed path.

Someone to lean on, someone to count on, someone to tell on...

:-)

In the northwest forest of Van Cortlandt Park, Bronx, New York.

Port Moody, BC, Canada

© Brian Tolin

Kenmerkend door beuken omgeven pad voor Gelderland /Characteristic surrounded by beech trees path in the Provence of Gelderland

Camera: Rollei 35

Lens: Tessar f/3.5 40 mm

Film: Fomapan Action 400, rated @ ISO 200

Exposure: 1/125 sec and f/8, hand-held

Film developed and scanned by Foto Brell, Bonn

Edited under Adobe Lightroom

Tunnel in the Trees - Lomography Fisheye No. 2, Fujicolor Superia 400

...in the Finnish Syöte National Park

 

Waldweg ... im finnischen Syöte Nationalpark

Walking in the Woods II - Holga 120N, Holga Fisheye Lens, Kodak T-Max 100 black and white film.

Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, BC, Canada

© Brian Tolin

A well worn pathway through the bluebells of Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire. Each April millions of the blue flowers carpet the woodland as the green of the new leaves grow high above.

When I saw this path leading directly to a hollow log I couldn't help but think of Alice falling down the rabbit hole.

 

I came upon this log on a beautiful trail that winds through groves of old-growth Western Red Cedar in the southeast interior of British Columbia. Some of the cedars are 800 years old. This is one of those rare places that feels ancient, silent and magical. It was cool and rainy that day, but the changing colours of thimbleberry caught the light and cast a golden glow into the darkened forest.

 

Old Growth Trail, Island Lake, near Fernie, British Columbia, Canada.

Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)

Lens: Novar Anastigmat f/3.5 75 mm

Film: Ilford HP5 Plus 400, rated @ ASA 800

Exposure: 1/150 sec and f/8, hand-held

Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab

Edited under Adobe Lightroom

 

Tree damage from heavy snowfall.

Lockdown walk after the rain

A photographic journey through the lush landscapes of the Bergisches Land – from tranquil forest streams to wide reservoir views and delicate macro scenes. Light, texture, and mood define this visual narrative of a morning immersed in nature.

I can only guess the history of this forest path that is along the slope of the Palisades uplands and overlooks the Hudson River. Perhaps the area was more densely populated at one time and it was once a road for colonist to get from Palisades to Piedmont. Even more fascinating, it may have once been a road for General Washington to move supplies between the New Jersey strongholds and West Point.

 

Probably the road began more recently and less romantically. This stone and dirt grading to rise above a wet dip in the forest is inside Tallman Mountain State Park now and the heaviest traffic it has seen in a long time had been hiking boots and mountain bikes.

Taken with Canon FD 50mm F3.5 Macro / Full Frame Sensor / Darktable.

Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)

Lens: Carl Zeiss Tessar f/3.5 75 mm

Film: Kodak Ektar 100

Exposure: 1/100 sec and f/5.6, hand-held

Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab

Edited under Adobe Lightroom and Nik Silver Efex Pro

* Norddeutschland | Northern Germany | Schleswig-Holstein

悟り

 

I'm very grateful for all your precious comments and feedbacks! 🌹 Have a beautiful, dreamy weekend ~

 

©Andrea Effulge

All rights reserved.

slid for sunday

and for soundtrack monday Donna Donna - Joan Baez - thanks Forestpath :)

 

so much nicer here

"The woods are lovely, dark and deep,

But I have promises to keep,

And miles to go before I sleep,

And miles to go before I sleep"

Robert Frost

  

Native Americans would bend young trees to create permanent trail markers. These could mark various safe trails, areas where food or water could be found, or other important sites.

 

These were seen near Jordan's Pond, in Acadia National Park.

 

The indigenous people who had inhabited this area were known as the Wabanaki people, a collective term for the Maliseet, Micmac, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot tribes. This translates to "People of the Dawnland".

 

More photos to come! Check out my album 2024 Northeast Roadtrip www.flickr.com/photos/25171569@N02/albums/72177720320440072/

 

Jenny Pansing photos

"Ich heiße Waldemar,

weil es im Walde war" ;-)

On the Wexford trails today at JFK Memorial Park.

EXPLORE, September 29, 2012, #159

Thought I’d change things up a bit with a candid taken at Bluesmobile Cruise Night in Mount Prospect last summer.

 

I didn’t post this earlier because I didn’t like the cluttered background. But when I saw an image posted yesterday by one of my contacts, jackalope22, in which he had edited some people out of the background, I decided to revisit this shot. I didn’t try to edit anyone out. But I did help the bokeh along with some softening and desaturation to try and deemphasize the clutter.

 

Happy Bokeh Wednesday, everyone!

 

Folks, it probably won't last for long, but another of my contacts, ForestPath, has discovered a way to escape from the new Flickr format. See her comment below:

 

NOTICE:For everyone who speaks English, and has been forced into Flickr's horrible "New Experience" today, there is still a way out of it.

If you go to the very bottom of your main photostream page, there is a horizontal list of languages you can choose. If you don't mind your menus and buttons etc being in a different language, you can choose one of those other languages, and your older format will return. Also, everyone else's format will be the older format too, when you visit their pages. What a relief!

 

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